Categories
Investing

184,000% In 23 Years: Why US Stocks Warrant Australian Investors’ Attention

Why investing outside your home market could lead you to better returns — even if your shares themselves don’t rise in price.

The United States is home to the biggest stock markets in the world.

The most well-known is the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). 

The NYSE is currently the biggest stock exchange in the world by market capitalization, valued at more than $30 trillion dollars (as of 2018).

If that were not impressive enough, the US also has the second biggest exchange in the world — he NASDAQ.

The NASDAQ is home to the biggest names in the technology world.

Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google (the ‘FAANG’ companies) all trade on the NASDAQ along with Netflix, PayPal and other world-leading tech stocks.

The FAANG stocks alone have a combined market capitalization of $4.1 trillion (as of January 2020).

Compare that to the whole of the ASX, which has a market capitalization of $2.1 trillion (as of November 2019).

The Big Leagues: Exposure To U.S.
Stocks Has Generated Insane Returns

Market capitalization is one thing.

But for individual investors, share price performance is far more interesting.

The US stock markets have produced some of the biggest share price increases in history.

Take Amazon. 

It went public at around $1.70 in 1997. 

Today, Amazon trades around $3,100.

That’s an increase of 184,000%.

That averages out at about 8,000% a year for 23 years — an absolutely huge return. 

Apple shares are a similar story. 

Back in 2003 you could buy an Apple share for $1.50. 

Today their share price is about $380 — an increase of more than 25,000%.

Only Investing In Your Home Market
Could Mean You Miss Huge Opportunities

As Australian investors, 75% of us only invest in shares on the ASX.

While there have been some fantastic success stories in Australia, there are clearly some huge potential gains to be found by investing further afield. 

Most of us are already very familiar with US companies.

Most of us use Microsoft products on a daily basis and could explain the business and its products quite clearly.  

This is already a great start for investing money.

Understanding what a business offers the market and how it operates is generally regarded as essential to buying shares in that business.  

When you think about it, you are probably more familiar with US companies than Australian ones. 

Apple. Nike. Visa. Tesla. 

These companies are not only household names, they’re stock market success stories on a scale many of us can’t really conceive of when we limit our view to the ASX alone. 

Yet 75% of Australians exclude these companies they know and love in favour of ASX listed stocks instead.

One Of The Tenets Of Risk Management
Makes Owning U.S. Stocks An Attractive Idea

Generally speaking, diversification is a primary strategy for minimising investment risk.

Spreading your investments across different stocks and sectors can help protect against big losses while making sure you are exposed to potential gains.

Investing in various stocks and sectors on the ASX is a good start to achieving a diverse portfolio.

But, what happens when there is an event that affects all of Australia?

A recession, for example.

All of the sectors in the ASX could potentially take a hit, dragging your portfolio down regardless of how well diversified you may have been.

This is where diversifying across regions comes in.

Say the local market falls off a cliff, for whatever reason, but you also own stocks in the US.

Your ASX shares might be taking a hit, but your US shares can help stabilise the portfolio, counter-balancing the losses.

Owning U.S. Shares Can Help Diversify
You In More Ways Than One…

One aspect of foreign investing we don’t often talk about is the influence of different currencies.

For instance if you buy 1000 shares for $1 USD each when the exchange rate between US and AUD was 1:1, that stock would be worth $1000 USD, or $1000 AUD.

The share price may not change.

But the exchange rate might. 

If the exchange rate changes to 0.7, your $1000 AUD holding would now be worth $1400 AUD without any capital gain in the stock itself. 

This can have a significant impact on your portfolio. 

Of course, this can go the other way — you can lose value if the currency exchange rates change against you and you sell. 

But it’s an important factor — and one you can potentially benefit from — in diversifying your investments beyond Australia. 

Track U.S. Stocks in AUD (And Currency
Gains) With Navexa’s Portfolio Tracker

Tracking your portfolio performance is an essential part of investing wisely.

Collating, analysing and interpreting data about past performance can help you make more informed, logical decisions about your future strategy.  

If you’re not taking care to track your capital gains, your dividend income and tax obligations, you can’t build an accurate picture of how your portfolio is doing.

And if you’re investing in multiple regions, accurate tracking and analytics become even more important.

Simply put, you need to know if your investing decisions are getting the results you seek or not.

Navexa’s portfolio tracking platform exists to give you the guidance and insight you need to invest on the ASX and in the US. 

It gives you detailed, near real-time analytics and reporting from the individual holding level up to multiple portfolios across the sectors and markets you invest in.

You can easily manage and track your investments across the ASX, NYSE, NASDAQ and most crypto currencies. 

If you invest in US stocks from Australia and you want an accurate picture of how those investments are performing in clear Australian Dollar terms, sign up to Navexa today.

Categories
Financial Literacy Investing

What If You Were Building Wealth From Scratch?

The times they are a changin’. Our need to build wealth is not — but the way we do it is. Here’s some ideas on how (and why) to begin investing now.

Maybe you’re 19 years old and have yet to pop your investing cherry.

Maybe you’re 29 years old and the penny has finally dropped that grinding out a 9-5 job for the next 30 years will bring you more misery than financial security.

Maybe you’re 39 years old and you need to recover having just lost a substantial chunk of capital in the markets.

Whatever the scenario, we’re going to take a look at the investing and personal finance landscape as it stands in mid 2020 and explore a couple of approaches for building wealth from at, or near, zero.

There are some aspects to investing that haven’t changed in hundreds of years.

But there are other parts of the wealth building process that are changing faster than ever before.

If you’re starting out building wealth in the financial markets today, you face a significantly different set of challenges and opportunities than you would have 50, 20 or even just five years ago.

In 2010 index funds were all the rage.

Today, just 10 years on, cryptocurrencies, private equity, micro investing and fintech are driving innovation and disruption to the point where, to many, index funds seem boring.

Starting from scratch today is a different beast on that basis alone — leaving the major economic fallout from COVID-19 aside.

So let’s start with the basics.

The Best Time To Begin Is Always Now

Whenever you begin investing, and at whatever age, your most powerful ally (or adversary) is time.

Anything you do in life requires time.

In investing, how you spend your time is particularly important.

You’ve probably heard the statement that time in the market is more powerful than timing the market.

This refers to the generally accepted idea that on a long enough timeline, stock prices go up.

In a two year period, the market might fall 50%.

But over a 20 year period, the market will probably rise 150% to 200%.

If you’re wondering whether to begin your investing journey now, the answer is yes based on that idea.

Check out this example from The Street to see why.

Take two 25-year olds.

The first commits to investing $5,000 a year for 11 years.

Total starting capital: $55,000.

The second waits until they are 35 to begin investing $5,000 a year and keeps doing so until age 60.

Let’s assume an annualized rate of return of 8% on their invested wealth.

The one who started at 25 invests $55,000.

The other invests $130,000.

Looking at that, you’d assume the second investor would gain the most, having invested more than double what the first did, right?

Well, check this out.

At 8% a year, the first investor has grown their portfolio to $615,000.

It’s taken 35 years to generate $560,000 in profits (forgetting brokerage fees and taxation for the purposes of this example).

The second investor, on the other hand, who started 10 years later but invested over 26 years instead of 11, has grown their portfolio to $430,000 from a total investment of $130,000.

Despite investing more money, they’ve made just $300,000 in profit — more than a quarter of a million dollars less than the one who started at age 25.

That, in a nutshell, is the supreme power of time in building wealth.

That’s why we say there’s no better time to start than now (providing your personal financial situation allows it, of course — this is not personalized financial advice!).

The way that time works for you when you start right away is that your returns compound.

If you leave your money and the returns it generates in the market, then you start making returns on top of those returns.

The more time you allow for this process — which Einstein called the eighth wonder of the world — the more you can benefit from it.

And on the topic of time…

Starting Early Allows You To Be
More Aggressive In Your Investing

If you are in your early 20s, for instance, you have about 33% more time — in theory —  before the notional retirement age of 60 to go about building wealth.

That’s 33% more time you can use to experiment, learn and refine your investing style.

It’s also extra time you can use to recover from any losses you might incur from investing in higher risk assets — like small caps, speculative tech stocks, cryptos and options.

Higher-than-average risk assets can sometimes bring higher-than-average returns.

If you get up and running early in life, you might find you can make some big returns by tolerating the higher risk.

But even if you’re only getting started in your 30s, you might want to allocate a small amount of capital to trying to win big in cryptos or options.

Generally, though, you probably won’t want to take on as much risk, as you’ll have less time — in theory — to recover from any losses your capital suffers.

Whenever you’re starting though, you should:

Cultivate Financial Literacy And Discipline

The saying ‘knowledge is power’ is a cliché. But it is so for a reason.

Because in many senses, it’s true.

In investing, it is especially true.  

In order to take $10,000, or $50,000, or $150,000 and multiply it 10 or 20 or 50 times through investing, you’re going to need to obtain and interpret a lot of knowledge.

Knowledge about the markets, the world, financial technology, business — basically everything.

Becoming financially literate will elevate your knowledge about the world and consequently your ability to navigate your wealth through the markets.

It’s a constant process. Read widely, expose yourself to different ideas about making money the constantly changing landscapes of both personal finance and the wider financial world.

Keep An Open Mind
And Let Data Guide You

Beginning your investing journey in 2020 is in some ways no different from if you were beginning in the 1980s.

But in other ways, it’s markedly different.

Today, you have access to more information than ever before.

If you have an internet connection, you have the ability to find out almost anything you like about a market, stock, anything, really.

You also have access to assets that didn’t exist even 15 years ago — cryptocurrencies — and ways of getting into the market that are only possible because of technology.

Micro investing is a prime example of that.

The apps and platforms that allow you to invest pocket change into funds and stocks take advantage of many strands of modern connectivity and financial technology to make investing more accessible and easy to understand.

You may have heard this trend called the ‘democratization of investing’.

This trend is the latest evolution in the history of wealth building.

Combined with the sheer amount of information available, the current state of the investing world means you have more power and knowledge than ever with which to begin your own wealth building journey.

The bottom line is, if you’re starting that journey in 2020, you should take advantage of the centuries of knowledge and research available to you — and the latest technology to help you implement that knowledge in your own investing.

To sum up then, if you’re just starting your wealth building journey…

Start as soon as possible and take advantage of every tool and piece of knowledge you can.

And now, a shameless plug for the platform we’ve designed to help you do just that.

This interplay between knowledge and technology is central to our portfolio tracking platform, Navexa.

We’ve built it to help you empower yourself and inform your decisions with near real-time data and analytical tools that, in decades past, would only have been available to those in the financial industry.

You can sign up free and get access to advances investing analytics and reporting tools, beautiful customisable charts and benchmarking.

Begin your Navexa trial here.